Happy Weird-Ass Pirate Multicart Day 2011

Last night, I dreamed that I was at a flea market, browsing for sweet deals. As often happens in these dreams, I encountered an out-of-the-way stall that held all sorts of video game treasures. Prototypes. Unreleased games. Rare Japanese titles. Everything was so cheap that I could have easily bought the entire lot…if the dealer accepted debit cards. As it happened, I only had two dollars in my wallet.

I knew that if I ran to an ATM to get more cash, another collector would sweep in and buy up everything. I could only afford one game: a sun-bleached NES cartridge with a peeling label that read “Teletubbies and More!” I had never heard of the game, so I figured that it must be valuable.

I bought the game, and ran from the table. I tripped on something and fell…but since this was a dream, I didn’t immediately hit the ground. Instead, I tumbled into an endless void. Clutching the Teletubbies cartridge, I fell for several minutes, waiting to hit bottom.

I was still holding my breath when I woke up. My heart raced. I sat up, thankful but secretly a little disappointed that it was only a dream. It was only 6 AM, so I decided to go back to sleep.

When my head hit the pillow, I felt something underneath.

My god.

This is where I stop lying: Teletubbies and More! is a real NES game. I bought it off the Internet years ago from a seller who offered no explanation regarding its origins, and who closed his eBay account shortly afterward.

Opening it up, I found that the cart’s plastic innards were crudely shaved to make room for a glop-topped 60-pin Famicom game board and a Nintendo-produced Famicom-to-NES adapter, like the ones found in early NES releases like Pinball and Gyromite.

While the game board was likely mass-produced (more on this in a minute), the cartridge was obviously hand-assembled. The label is cheap printer paper, and given that the manufacturer would need to sacrifice actual NES cartridge shells and official Famicom-to-NES adapters for each unit, I’d bet that not very many of these were made. It might even be the only one of its kind.

I recently had it dumped. You can download the ROM here. It’s not yet emulated, but the mapper (#237) has been documented, if you want to add it to your own emulator or open-source project. Please let me know if you do!

But what about the game itself? I wish I could show it off in screenshots, but since it’s not emulated, I had to resort to taking photos of the game playing on original NES hardware. Apologies for the crappy quality, but…well, best I could do.

Okay. So it turns out that “Teletubbies and More!” is actually “Y2K 420-in-1,” a pirate multicart of unknown origin. The characters on the splash screen hint at something a little more sinister than your average pirated game, though. Top row: Pikachu, Po, Buzz Lightyear. Bottom row: Woody, Doraemon, and Raphael.

This is the game selection screen, listing the typical multicart lineup of Mapper 0 titles, save for a few unfamiliar names.

“Aladdin III” is, as expected, a clone of Magic Carpet from Caltron 6-in-1. It’s a common sight in multicarts and in the occasional standalone cartridge. Pity the poor sucker who buys an Aladdin Famicom cart expecting to find a pirate clone of the Genesis Aladdin game and instead ends up with this.

Next up is “Pokemon,” which could be anything. Pirates have shoehorned Pokemon characters into a number of NES games over the years — like Little Nemo and Felix the Cat, for instance.

In this case, it’s a hacked version of Hudson’s first NES game, Nuts & Milk. In this new version, Muddy Pikachu must escape the grasp of a sickly Gray Pikachu while collecting…uh, bananas, and things. Beyond the simple character sprite switch, no attempt has been made to make this resemble a real Pokemon game.

Game #4 is “Toy Story II,” which surely must be more interesting. A pirated NES adaptation of the Genesis and Super NES Toy Story game is known to exist, so maybe that’s what this is?

No. It’s Bomberman, with Woody from Toy Story. Keeping the theme of the movie, Woody wanders a series of underground mazes and plants bombs to blow up his friends.

Next is…oh my god, seriously? That’s what it’s called? “Ding Dong”?

Ah, Binary Land, another early Hudson game. I actually kind of enjoy Binary Land. I guess I’ll like it more now that it stars Doraemon and a pink Doraemon.

Finally, we get to the cart’s namesake, “Teletubbies.” Hate to disappoint you, but it’s just Mario Bros. with some horrifying Teletubbies hacked in. Sort of anticlimactic, I know.

But hey, here’s “Ninja Turtles”! I wonder which TMNT game this is? Is it the awful original game? The not-awful TMNT II: The Arcade Game? Maybe TMNT III: The Manhattan Project? Or, ooh, maybe the pirates saw the value in adding the rare NES version of TMNT: Tournament Fighters to their lineup?

The correct answer is “none of the above.” This game finds Raphael on a quest to save his father, Donkey Kong, from the evil Mario.

I don’t know.

“98FIFA Soccer,” huh.

Yeah, that sure is Nintendo’s Soccer. The next few games are also commonly seen on other multicarts, so I’ll skip those.

What the…”Home Alone”? That’s an odd choice for a multicart.

Oh god no. It’s Brush Roller, also previously seen in Caltron 6-in-1. I don’t know what that thing on the title screen is, but I hate it.

So what’s the deal with “Tiny Tank,” “Super Tank,” and “90 Tank?” They’re all clones of Battle City, a terrible early Namco game that’s commonly seen in multicarts. On the plus side, “90 Tank” has a really glitchy first level. So that’s something.

At this point, my cat walks by and briefly wonders why I’m sitting on the floor and constantly resetting my NES. He then ambles away in disgust.

“King Kong” is just a later level of Donkey Kong Jr., still inexplicably starring a Ninja Turtle.

Game #34, “Toy Story,” is…Circus Charlie? Sure, okay.

And we’ve already run out of new games. It’s not unexpected — there’s always a lot of repeats in pirated multicarts. Maybe I’ll just play some Pac-Man.

Wha…hey! What’s going on here? This is Namco’s Mappy, but with…

Actually, what is that thing? A blob on wheels? Anyone have any idea? [Update: Believe it or not, it’s the main character from Nuts & Milk. What a strange thing to hack Mappy with. Thanks, ssmoop and DarkTetsuya.]

Next I see “Kung Fu” in the list. I like Irem’s Kung Fu. Let’s play some Kung Fu.

This entry was posted on Saturday, June 18th, 2011 at 5:26 pm and is filed under NES, Pirate. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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Thanks for sharing this blog post! I came across it 4-5 years ago. But forgot about it until now. One of my cousins his dad bought a copy of this ‘Teletubbies and More’ cart back in 2002. We both played some of the 420 games (many of which are just repeats with different sprites or modifications).

It was definitely a strange and rather creepy experience. The release date (2000-2001) is strange too. By then, the NES had been discontinued for 5-6 years and the SNES 1-2 years. My cousin seemed to like the sprites and believed they were actually Pokemon, Toy Story, and Ninja Turtles, etc games.

Regarding Ding Dong, I think that’s the Chinese name for Doraemon. I doubt this pirate cart was made in China though since masterhibb posted a link saying ‘Teletubbies Arab’.

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